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How a late-night TV viewer brought Jim Hammes’ long hike to an end.

JIM HAMMES WAS an accountant for a company that bottles Pepsi. To all appearances he led a well-to-do, conservative family life in Lexington, Kentucky.

He started as a financial controller at G + J PepsiCola Bottlers in 1995, and lived with his wife Joy and their daughter Amanda.

Joy died in 2003, and Hammes remarried three years later.

On 23 February 2009, at the age of 46, he vanished.

This week, Hammes sits in the Butler County jail, while the US District Court in Southern Ohio prepares to hear charges that could land him a 1,130-year prison sentence.

Hammes, now 53, is accused of secretly embezzling $8.7 million, before going on the run and living – not on some Caribbean island, but in the woods, for six years.

And his long hike came to an end after an epiphany by a member of the public watching TV late one night.

Court documents allege that in 1998, Hammes started falsifying invoices for a Cincinnati company called CW Zumbiel, which provided wrapping services for his employer, G + J.

He fraudulently set up an accounts-payable bank account in the name of Zumbiel, and according to the 75-count indictment against him, funnelled payments (for services that were never performed) through the Zumbiel account, and into his personal coffers.

The transactions varied from $9,260 to as much as $200,000.

In just one fortnight, a few weeks before his disappearance, Hammes funnelled $1,180,000 into his two accounts.

In all, he is accused of embezzling $8,711,282.42 from his employer.

In February 2009, however, someone at Zumbiel was looking over cheques the company had received from G + J, and spotted an anomaly. A €4.6 million anomaly.

The unauthorised Zumbiel account, set up by Hammes without anyone’s knowledge, was discovered. The bank was called. And then the FBI arrived on the scene.

They interviewed Hammes, but he asked to see his lawyer, and was allowed to leave, SB Nation reports.

Two days later, 24 February, FBI Special Agent Pamela Matson got a judge to sign a warrant for Hammes’ arrest. But some time in the intervening 48 hours, he had fled.

‘Deceitful Dad and the Missing Millions’

Source: FBI

According to the FBI, Hammes had been going on scuba-diving trips to the tiny island of Curacao.

And with the prevalence of money-laundering and tax havens in the Caribbean region, it might have been logical to assume that Hammes had skipped the country.

But in reality, Hammes was hiding almost in plain sight, moving from state to state on the Appalachian Trail, which extends north and south along the eastern US, from Georgia to Maine.

Jim Hammes went hiking. He grew out his hair and beard, told different people different stories about his past, and adopted the name “Bismarck.”

As Bismarck, he became something of a legend along the Appalachian Trail.

A blog entry on the Appalachian Trail website said Bismarck was known to be “courteous, intelligent and a savvy denizen of the trail.”

One hiker who knew him called him “nice, intelligent and helpful.” Another said Bismarck had a “terrific reputation.”

One prominent hiker, Paul “Big Tex” Bunker, outlined the reasons why Bismarck was able to evade the forces of the US federal government for so long.

In his telling, everything that might otherwise make you stand out – having a long beard, not using your real name, always paying with cash, not having a discernible income source – is utterly normal on the Trail.

“The man had a beard, dirty scruffy clothes, smelt bad, and a pack” – that’s the majority of the males hiking the trail.

But back in the “real world” that so many try to escape by spending months and years on the scenic hiking route, Jim Hammes was becoming a villain.

He was added to the FBI’s Most Wanted list, and in the space of a month in 2012, Hammes was featured on CNBC’s American Greed, under the tagline “Deceitful Dad and the Missing Millions,” and the popular true crime show America’s Most Wanted.

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